 |
 | If
you need more money for your business, Consulting Link2000 can help. There
are possibilities out there galore. New loan programs are cropping up all
the time for people with specific needs. For example, one bank around town
has a loan program for minority and women owned businesses. Another bank
has a loan program for people who need under $5,000. Some banks specialize
in loans for working capital, others real estate and still others equipment
and machinery. Some banks will combine all of the above. Some banks do not
work with start-ups or construction companies and some sure enough do. For
some banks, a strong cash flow is important while others love strong assets.
If your company does not fall within the banks criteria, there is always
the State loan guarantee to make up for it and to make the bankers very
happy. We can help you factor your receivables, get investment money, a
line of credit. We prepare the package for you and then market your loan
at one or more banks. We will work with you and the banks until we get it
done. Capital formation for small business has been a strength of Consulting Link2000.
The firm has linkages with government, non-profit agencies, large and small
banks in San Francisco's Financial District, Peninsula, South Bay and East
Bay, North Bay, Southern California and throughout the United States. Consulting Link2000
has worked with the Bay Area Small Business Development Corporation, Renaissance
Entrepreneurship Center, NEDA, and the Solano County Organizing Committee
and Small Business Development Centers. Consulting Link2000 has served as
an intermediary for traditional and innovative loan guarantee, micro business,
and Community Reinvestment Act (CRA) loan programs. Consulting Link2000 has
obtained over $20 million in funding for small and minority and women owned
businesses. We have accessed financing from Community Reinvestment Act (CRA)
programs operated by WestAmerica Bank, Bank of America, Bank of the West,
City Bank, Bank of California, Union Bank, Bank of the Orient, American
California Bank, Millennia Bank, and a host of other small banks with aggressive
CRA loan programs. |